Note About Israel and Sunday’s Town Hall

By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar What a tragic and disconcerting week it’s been in Israel, a place so deeply held in so many of our hearts. Not only are bombs and rockets flying back and forth, an all-too-familiar experience for residents of Israel and Gaza, but neighborhoods are being torn asunder—mob violence in Israel among Jews and […]

A Powerful Teaching on the Earth from Our Bat Mitzvah

By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar This past Shabbat we celebrated the Bat Mitzvah of Stella Wolson. Stella’s parashah (portion) was a double portion called Behar-Behukotai, the culminating portion of the third book of Torah, the Book of Vaykira, or, Leviticus. Stella’s parashah begins with, from our contemporary perspective, a radical set of land use laws. Now, lest you […]

The Sacredness of Communal Cohesion

This past Shabbat, our weekly Torah reading landed us in the penultimate parashah (portion) of the book of Vayikra (Leviticus) where we encounter a priestly articulation of the rhythms of the Jewish year: each biblical Jewish holiday—from Passover, to Shavuot, to the High Holidays and Sukkot—is spelled out, along with its associated rituals and tabernacle offerings—from the shofar on […]

A Teaching on Loving Thy Neighbor as Thyself from Our Bat Mitzvah

By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar This past Shabbat, in the first Shabbat service held in our sanctuary in over a year, we celebrated the Bat Mitzvah ceremony of Sam G. It was the first of seven B’nei Mitzvah ceremonies we are celebrating at SHS over the course of the ten weeks. (Recall that last year we […]

Is This A Beginning?

By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar This week, a Minneapolis jury reached a verdict of guilty on all counts in the murder of George Floyd—a father, son, brother, and human being. This verdict was momentous for a number of reasons. As the murder was captured on video for all the world to see, it seized our attention, […]